Tax Update for Advisors – March 2010
Agenda
2010 Federal Tax Brackets
Non-refundable Tax Credits
EI special benefits for self-employed
Interest deductibility update
#1 - Claim those renos (Schedule 12)
#2 – Split that pension (Form T1032)
#3 – Pool your donations (Schedule 9)
#4 – Defer stock option benefits (T1212)
Relief for underwater stock options
Relief for underwater stock options
Elimination of deferral & remittance requirement
#5 – Write off the kids!
#6 – Report offshore stash (T1135)
#7 – Claim legal fees
#8 – File on time
#9 – Report all your income
#10 - Avoid that refund
Plan NOT to Get a Refund!
Plan NOT to Get a Refund! (cont’d)
Capital gain in 2009 – OAS
Capital gain in 2009 – OAS (cont’d)
Miscellaneous tax update
TFSA carry-forward room
TFSA – New “anti-avoidance” rules
TFSA – Deliberate overcontributions
TFSA – Prohibited investments
TFSA – Asset transfer transactions
U.S. Estate Tax Update
2009 U.S. Estate Tax Rates
U.S. Estate Tax Exemption / Rates
Where are we now?
Where are we now?
Garron Family Trust (2009)
Marechaux (2009)
Innovative Installation Inc. (2009)
Life insurance – “Holdco” & “Sub”
Bilodeau (2009)
Li (2009)
Rupprecht (2009)
Renaissance Funds – Advisor site
Thank You
2.33M
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Tax update for Аdvisors

1. Tax Update for Advisors – March 2010

Jamie Golombek
Managing Director

2. Agenda

2010 tax changes
Top 10 Tax Filing Tips (2009 returns)
TFSA update
U.S estate tax update
Hot tax cases
2

3. 2010 Federal Tax Brackets

3

4. Non-refundable Tax Credits

4

5. EI special benefits for self-employed

Self-employed can now “opt-in” to receive “Special
Benefits”
– Maternity (15 weeks)
– Parental/adoptive (35 weeks)
– Sickness (15 weeks)
– Compassionate care (6 weeks)
Must opt-in at least one year before collecting
Must have self-employment income > $6,000
5

6. Interest deductibility update

“Borrowed for the purpose of earning income”
Stocks that don’t pay any/sufficient dividends?
Equity funds that don’t pay sufficient/any income
distributions?
Not deductible? Limited to amount received? Fully
deductibile?
CRA Income Tax Technical News (12/23/2009)
6

7. #1 - Claim those renos (Schedule 12)

Home Renovation Tax Credit
Expired January 31, 2010
Materials purchased before
Feb 2010 qualify even if
they are installed after
January 2010
Labour only qualifies if work
was done before February
2010, even if prepaid
7

8. #2 – Split that pension (Form T1032)

Pension income?
Before age 65?
• Regular monthly pension from DB or DC plan
After age 65?
• Includes RRIF (LIF, LRIF, PRIF) withdrawals
Benefits:
Transfer up to 50% of pension income to lowerincome spouse / partner
Avoiding / Minimizing impact of Old Age Security
clawbacks
Doubling of pension income credit
Reducing net income grind of age credit
8

9. #3 – Pool your donations (Schedule 9)

15% credit on first $200
29% above $200
Pool husband / wife / common law partner donations
9

10. #4 – Defer stock option benefits (T1212)

Election to defer taxable
employment benefit until
year of sale
Jay receives 1,000 options
to acquire shares @ $20
Jay exercises options in
September 2009 when
shares worth $220
– Elected to defer tax on the
$200,000 employment
benefit
10

11. Relief for underwater stock options

Share crashes – now worth $10/share or $10,000
Jay sells
– Gets cash of $10,000
– Owes tax on employment benefit deferred of $200,000
– Can’t use capital loss of $210,000 against employment
benefit
HELP!!!
Remission order November 2007 – SDL Optics Inc. (JDS
Uniphase)
11

12. Relief for underwater stock options

BUDGET 2010: New rule – special tax equal to proceeds of
disposition of optioned shares
Jay would pay tax of $10,000 (proceeds) vs. tax on
employment income benefit of $50,000 (at capital gains
rates)
12

13. Elimination of deferral & remittance requirement

Elimination of deferral & remittance
requirement
Effective for exercises after March 4, 2010 – 4 pm ET
No more tax deferral of employment option benefit
Employer must now remit tax upon employee exercise
13

14. #5 – Write off the kids!

Child amount - $2,089/child
– Non-refundable credit (federal – 15%)
Children’s fitness tax credit - $500/child
– Children <16 at beginning of 2009
File returns for kids
– RRSP contribution room
– RRSP vs TFSA
University students
– Tuition, education, textbook amounts
– Interest paid on student loans
– Transit pass credit
– Moving expenses
14

15. #6 – Report offshore stash (T1135)

Foreign income verification
statement
More than $100,000 (CDN)
– Funds in foreign bank accounts
– Shares of non-resident
corporations
– Foreign real estate
EXEMPT
– Canadian mutual funds (even if
own foreign shares)
Penalty - $25/day (Max
$2,500)
Leclerc
15

16. #7 – Claim legal fees

Loss of employment in 2009
Legal fees paid to:
– Collect / establish right to salary or wages owed
– Collect / establish right to pension / retiring allowance
Includes damages / settlements for wrongful dismissal
Limited to pension / retiring allowance
Seven year carryforward
16

17. #8 – File on time

April 30 / June 15
5% of amount owing + 1%/month (12 months)
– 2nd time – 10% + 2% month (20 months)
Arrears interest at prescribed rate + 4%
– 5% for Q1/Q2 2010
17

18. #9 – Report all your income

Missing receipt?
– File on time and estimate missing item
Penalty of 10% (+ 10% provincially) for failure to
include amount in income
Sabharwal case
18

19. #10 - Avoid that refund

Reduce tax at source
Reduce OAS clawback at source
19

20. Plan NOT to Get a Refund!

in·tax·i·fi·ca·tion (in-täk-sə-fə-kā-shən) noun
the euphoria of
getting a tax refund
that lasts only until
you realize it was
your own money to
begin with…
20

21. Plan NOT to Get a Refund! (cont’d)

“Undue hardship” provision
Too much tax withheld at source
Due to:
– RRSP contributions
– Support payments
– Childcare expenses
– Charitable donations
Form T1213
21

22. Capital gain in 2009 – OAS

Client will pay back all 2009 OAS because large
capital gain in 2009 (income > $107,692)
Client will also lose 2010 OAS based on 2009 income
What if high 2009 income (gain) was a one-time
occurrence?
22

23. Capital gain in 2009 – OAS (cont’d)

Apply for 2010 reduction of tax at source – OAS
Form T1213 OAS
23

24. Miscellaneous tax update

TFSA update
State of US estate tax
Cases of interest
24

25. TFSA carry-forward room

$10,000 opportunity
$20,000 opportunity (spouses/partners)
– No attribution
25

26. TFSA – New “anti-avoidance” rules

1. Deliberate overcontributions
2. Prohibited investments
3. Asset transfer transactions
4. Non-qualified investments (land, etc.)
After October 16, 2009
Withdrawals of any of the above do not create
additional TFSA contribution room
26

27. TFSA – Deliberate overcontributions

Any income attributable to deliberate overcontributions
and prohibited investments subject to 100% tax
– Tom overcontributes to his TFSA by $100,000
– Buys 1 million shares at 10 cents/share of XYZ Jr. Oil
– Overcontribution penalty is 1% per month = $1,000
– Stock doubles, Tom withdraws his over-contribution
– TFSA has realized a $100,000 gain inside his TFSA
– NEW RULES: $100,000 of penalty tax payable
27

28. TFSA – Prohibited investments

Any income attributable to prohibited investments subject
to 100% tax
– Dick invests $5,000 of his TFSA in private company
shares of which he is a significant shareholder (owns >
10%)
– Company declares a $1-million dividend on shares held
by TFSA
– Dick pays a one-time penalty tax equal to 150% of the
normal tax that would have been payable on the $1million dividend if earned outside the TFSA
– The $1-million, however, could remain inside the TFSA
and grow tax- free for life
– NEW RULES: $1-million of penalty tax payable
28

29. TFSA – Asset transfer transactions

Effectively prohibit asset transfer transactions between
TFSAs and other accounts by taxing at 100%
– Harry “sells” $5,000 of ABC shares (Bid $0.10, Ask
$0.30) to his TFSA for cash, using $0.10 Bid price
– Harry subsequently “sells” shares from TFSA to his nonregistered account, using $0.30 cent Ask price
– Result: $10,000 "gain" remains inside the TFSA
– NEW RULES: Entire gain of $10,000 taxed
back
29

30. U.S. Estate Tax Update

Assume nonresident, non-U.S.
citizen (“ALIEN”)
U.S. situs property:
– U.S. real estate
– U.S. stocks
NOT Cdn mutual
funds that own
U.S. stocks
IRS Chief Counsel
Advice
(1/22/2010)
30

31. 2009 U.S. Estate Tax Rates

From
To
Tax on bottom
of range
0
10,000
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
150,000
250,000
500,000
750,000
1,000,000
1,250,000
1,500,000
10,000
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
150,000
250,000
500,000
750,000
1,000,000
1,250,000
1,500,000
and over
0
1,800
3,800
8,200
13,000
18,200
23,800
38,800
70,800
155,800
248,300
345,800
448,300
555,800
Rate on
Excess
18%
20%
22%
24%
26%
28%
30%
32%
34%
37%
39%
41%
43%
45%
Source: BDO Dunwoody LLP, May 15, 2008
31

32. U.S. Estate Tax Exemption / Rates

32

33. Where are we now?

December 2009 – U.S. House of Representatives
approved Bill to extend
– 45% / $3.5 MM
Rejected by U.S. Senate
– 45% / $5.0 MM
Constitutionality of retroactive estate tax?
33

34. Where are we now?

34

35. Garron Family Trust (2009)

Barbados trusts
$450 million capital gain
Residency of trusts
– IT 447 “Residence of a Trust or Estate”
– Thibodeau
TCC: “where central management and control
actually abides”
35

36. Marechaux (2009)

Leveraged donation tax shelter
Produces "return on donation of up to 62.4%”
Supported by a tax opinion "from a firm of respected
tax lawyers"
"subject only to a risk of challenge by the CRA"
described as "slim”
$100,000 donation = $30K cash + $80K “interestfree loan” (included $10K in fees)
Was there a “gift”?
36

37. Innovative Installation Inc. (2009)

Innovative borrowed $220,000 from RBC
“Key person” life insurance purchased on founder’s
life
– Beneficiary was RBC (creditor)
Death benefit paid directly to RBC
Who “received” the proceeds of the policy?
– Is there a credit to CDA?
37

38. Life insurance – “Holdco” & “Sub”

Life insurance – “Holdco” & “Sub”
HOLDCO
Mr. A
Beneficiary
& receives death benefit
100%
100%
SUB
Policyholder & pays
premiums on life of Mr. A
New CRA position (December 23, 2009) – shareholder
benefit conferred on holdco by subco
Jan 1, 2010 for new policies, 2011 for existing
policies
38

39. Bilodeau (2009)

Financial advisor purchased two $1 million UL
policies
Life insurance commissions ($43,000) on advisor’s
own policy
Taxability
– Interpretation Bulletin IT-470R, “Employees’ fringe
benefits”
– Paragraph 27 - “Discounts on Merchandise and
Commissions on Sales”
39

40. Li (2009)

Financial advisor deducted various employment
expenses:
– Salary to assistant/husband ($14,000)
Form T2200 inconsistencies
– Commissions on sale of own life insurance policy
($7,000)
40

41. Rupprecht (2009)

Financial advisor deducted:
– Costco membership fees
– Clothing ($8,400 in “suitable clothing”)
– RRSP penalties for exceeding foreign content limit
41

42. Renaissance Funds – Advisor site

42

43. Thank You

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